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Histoires d'outre-tombe

Original title: Tales from the Crypt
  • 1972
  • 12
  • 1h 32m
IMDb RATING
6.8/10
14K
YOUR RATING
Joan Collins, Peter Cushing, and Ralph Richardson in Histoires d'outre-tombe (1972)
Five strangers get lost in a crypt and, after meeting the mysterious Crypt Keeper, receive visions of how they will die.
Play trailer1:57
2 Videos
81 Photos
DramaHorrorMysteryThriller

Five strangers get lost in a crypt and, after meeting the mysterious Crypt Keeper, receive visions of how they will die.Five strangers get lost in a crypt and, after meeting the mysterious Crypt Keeper, receive visions of how they will die.Five strangers get lost in a crypt and, after meeting the mysterious Crypt Keeper, receive visions of how they will die.

  • Director
    • Freddie Francis
  • Writers
    • Milton Subotsky
    • Al Feldstein
    • Johnny Craig
  • Stars
    • Joan Collins
    • Peter Cushing
    • Ralph Richardson
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • IMDb RATING
    6.8/10
    14K
    YOUR RATING
    • Director
      • Freddie Francis
    • Writers
      • Milton Subotsky
      • Al Feldstein
      • Johnny Craig
    • Stars
      • Joan Collins
      • Peter Cushing
      • Ralph Richardson
    • 133User reviews
    • 87Critic reviews
  • See production info at IMDbPro
  • Videos2

    Trailer
    Trailer 1:57
    Trailer
    Tales From The Crypt: Killer Santa On The Loose
    Clip 2:25
    Tales From The Crypt: Killer Santa On The Loose
    Tales From The Crypt: Killer Santa On The Loose
    Clip 2:25
    Tales From The Crypt: Killer Santa On The Loose

    Photos81

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    Top cast52

    Edit
    Joan Collins
    Joan Collins
    • Joanne Clayton (segment "And All Through the House")
    Peter Cushing
    Peter Cushing
    • Grimsdyke (segment "Poetic Justice")
    Ralph Richardson
    Ralph Richardson
    • The Crypt Keeper
    • (as Sir Ralph Richardson)
    Geoffrey Bayldon
    Geoffrey Bayldon
    • Guide
    Martin Boddey
    Martin Boddey
    • Husband (segment "And All Through the House")
    Chloe Franks
    Chloe Franks
    • Daughter (segment "And All Through The House")
    Oliver MacGreevy
    • Maniac (segment "And All Through the House")
    Ian Hendry
    Ian Hendry
    • Carl Maitland (segment "Reflection of Death")
    Susan Denny
    • Wife (segment "Reflection of Death")
    Angela Grant
    • Susan (segment "Reflection of Death")
    • (as Angie Grant)
    Robin Phillips
    Robin Phillips
    • Elliot (segment "Poetic Justice")
    David Markham
    David Markham
    • Father (segment "Poetic Justice")
    Robert Hutton
    Robert Hutton
    • Neighbour (segment "Poetic Justice")
    Richard Greene
    Richard Greene
    • Jason (segment "Wish You Were Here")
    Barbara Murray
    Barbara Murray
    • Enid (segment "Wish You Were Here")
    Roy Dotrice
    Roy Dotrice
    • Gregory (segment "Wish You Were Here")
    Nigel Patrick
    Nigel Patrick
    • Rogers (segment "Blind Alleys")
    Patrick Magee
    Patrick Magee
    • Carter (segment "Blind Alleys")
    • Director
      • Freddie Francis
    • Writers
      • Milton Subotsky
      • Al Feldstein
      • Johnny Craig
    • All cast & crew
    • Production, box office & more at IMDbPro

    User reviews133

    6.813.9K
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    Featured reviews

    Poseidon-3

    Nice collection of bitter little tales

    Based on the old (and rather controversial) E.C. Comics of the mid-20th century, this horror anthology is an above average entry in an intriguing (and all but dead) genre. Here there is a tour group seen roaming through some ancient catacombs with five attendees obstinately staying behind, despite numerous warnings to stick close together. They find themselves severed from the group and wind up in a tomb-like room with creepy Richardson in a monk's robe doling out orders and insights. The quintet is made to sit while each one gets a glimpse into his or her recent life. Thus the five brief stories are presented in order, each one with a morbid, ironic or gory twist to it. Collins (looking svelte and attractive) is in the first one. She splits her husband's head open as he's benignly reading the newspaper while cheery Christmas music plays on the soundtrack. (Hilariously, she kicks him down the steps while "God Rest Ye Merry Gentlemen" drones on.) Before she can properly dispose of his body, an escaped mental patient in a Santa suit starts terrorizing her! Then Hendry is shown leaving his wife and children for a younger woman. A fateful experience on the freeway changes his life forever. Next up, snooty Phillips is being driven up the wall by his neighbor - kindly, but eccentric, old man Cushing. Phillips continuously thwarts Cushing until he gives up...but does he? A fourth tale features Greene (as a greedy gunrunner) who is forced to part with his possessions, but his wife spies an inscription on an old statuette and discovers that she can use it to ask for three wishes. This doesn't work out quite as optimistically as she had hoped. Finally, Patrick is a militant, heartless administrator of a home for the blind. He pushes the male inhabitants there to their limit and winds up paying dearly for his sins. Though no story gets enough time spent on it to really flesh it out to it's greatest potential, most of them are really intriguing and usually very well acted. The spareness of the locations and effects help set a rather desolate and chilly mood. The finest acting is probably provided by Cushing in a very atypical role. The most memorable vignette is the last one which features an unforgettable comeuppance. Fans of British horror (and especially of anthologies) will rank this pretty highly, but it's interesting enough to lure other viewers as well.
    10ClassixFan

    Not Your Typical Bedtime Story!

    Amicus Studios, best known for their anthology films nailed it with this effort from 1972. With five solid stories to chill your bones, this anthology is one of my favorite films, bar none. The film is packed with a solid cast that includes; Peter Cushing, Joan Collins, Ian Hednry and Richard Greene, just to name a few. My personal faves from this anthology would be; All Through the House, Poetic Justice and Wish You Were Here, but all five stories are really well done. The Peter Cushing story is particularly touching, Cushing does a wonderful job of playing a sad man, mourning the death of his wife, in his story, which very much paralleled Cushing's own life, as he was still in mourning over the recent loss of his own wife. If you're a fan of the macabre, then you owe it to yourself to seek this 1972 film out, it is quite tame by today's standards as far as blood and gore go, but the chill factor is definitely there.
    7Coventry

    Very good horror anthology by specialist company Amicus

    The early 70's were golden years for the British horror industry… Hammer produced their last goodies, while there was another company who specialized in making the so-called `horror-omnibuses'… During a reign of approximately 10 years, Amicus brought forward anthologies going from nearly brilliant (The House that Dripped Blood) to very bad (The Monster Club). Tales From the Crypt surely belongs to their greatest achievements as well and it guarantees an hour and a half of delightful horror entertainment. Five stories are presented to us, and at least four of them have an above average quality level. (Sir) Ralph Richardson appears as the host. Disguised as the Cryptkeeper, he shows the unfortunate dead of 5 people who descended into his vault…

    The film is based on a fifties comic book success formula, which also resulted in a popular spin-off series in the early nineties. The protagonists are always doomed and these tales show their regress into death… Each of the stories has its own, unique setting and atmosphere and, together, they cover pretty much all the favorite horror topics. Yet, 5 stories is a little exaggerated and therefore aren't fully elaborated…

    Especially the first story suffers from its own shortness…It involves a bitchy woman (a stunningly beautiful Joan Collins) who kills her husband, but finds herself trapped in her house while an escaped lunatic lurks through the windows. This first story is pretty bloody and tense, and I wish it had been a little longer (if it were only to look at Collins some more…). The second story by far is the worst of them all and I feel they should have left this one out. The storyline has nothing new to offer and the acting is uninspired. Tale number three stars horror-legend Peter Cushing and he's the good guy for a change! Cushing is a lonely man who offers presents to the neighborhood children and throws parties for them…I guess this wasn't an issue in the seventies yet! Or was it? Cushing character is hated by his next-door neighbor, but eventually avenges himself. The fourth story is my personal favorite since it really breathes an almost unbearable morbidity…it's a variant on the famous monkey-claw myth, which provides the owner with 3 wishes. This chapter is really chilling and the scenery is great! It also has the best make-up effects and adorable twisted humor! The final story is very ingenious and chilling as well and it entirely takes places in an institute for the blind. The new manager introduces a whole lot of economy measures, while he's living a life of luxury. At one point, the inhabitants won't take it anymore and they show him what being blind feels like
    7MovieFan983

    A nice way to waste a couple of hours

    Tales From the Crypt is a movie, that is different than most horror movies. It starts out with people wandering through a tomb on a tour, they stray away and end up locked in a crypt with a strange man in it. He tells them stories about what happened or what is about to happen to them.

    The movie itself is stylishly made, and somewhat suspenseful. The acting in it is above par, and although the film itself never goes to being a triumph, it does stay entertaining till the end, to a shocking final twist. But I must say even though the film is PG, it's like JAWS, it has quite a bit of violence and blood in it, and parents should be warned that if this was released now it would be PG-13.

    So if you're a fan of thrillers that are intelligent, scary, and stylish, Tales From the Crypt is one for you. And if you're one that just wants to waste a couple of hours, this is a fun movie, that you won't regret seeing.
    7hitchcockthelegend

    Death Lives!

    Horror anthologies are invariably a mixed bag and Tales from the Crypt is no different in that respect. Five horror stories of fluctuating quality, it is however one of the best of the bunch and arguably the best from the house of Amicus.

    The wrap around has five people taking a tour of spooky catacombs who get lured into a hidden crypt where a cowl wearing man reveals to them exactly why they are there.

    Stories 3 & 5 are the better efforts here, boosted considerably by top grade lead character performances from Peter Cushing and Patrick Magee, but as always with anthology movies, there's something for everyone. So roll the dice horror fans and take a chance, this is great fun, a real popcorn and wine night in by the fire. 7/10

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    Storyline

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    Did you know

    Edit
    • Trivia
      Peter Cushing is said to "act as himself" in this movie. Cushing's wife had died recently, and he was very depressed. His character is a widower who uses an ouija board to talk with his dead wife. The dead wife is said to have been called "Helen" - the name of Cushing's real wife.
    • Goofs
      In the "Wish You Were Here" segment, Enid wishes her husband to back to life forever, but at the end it is revealed that he and the others have gone to a place where those who have died without repenting go.
    • Quotes

      Father: [reading Arthur Grimsdyke's revenge letter written in the dead James Elliot's blood] "You were cruel and mean right from the start, now you can truly say you have no... heart".

    • Alternate versions
      The 2007 Region 1 DVD from Twentieth Century-Fox contains some extra scenes when compared to the original theatrical and previous home video releases. At the conclusion of the story "Poetic Justice," previous releases showed the man beginning to open the bottom part of the Valentine's letter, it then cuts to him screaming and covering his face with his hands, and then cuts back to the letter to reveal a still beating, severed heart inside the paper. The 2007 release actually shows the heart when he opens the letter, his scream is heard off-screen, then it cuts to him covering his face, then cuts back to the shot of the heart as in previous releases except, the shot is slightly longer. In the story "Wish You Were Here," when Enid chops up Ralph with the saber, there is a shot of Ralph's exposed intestines which was not present in previous releases.
    • Connections
      Featured in Stephen King's World of Horror (1986)
    • Soundtracks
      Toccata & Fugue in D minor
      Written by Johann Sebastian Bach (as Bach)

      Played by Nicolas Kynaston

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    FAQ

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    Details

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    • Release date
      • February 13, 1974 (France)
    • Country of origin
      • United Kingdom
    • Language
      • English
    • Also known as
      • Contes d'outre-tombe
    • Filming locations
      • Highgate Cemetery, Swain's Lane, Highgate, London, England, UK(opening credits)
    • Production company
      • Amicus Productions
    • See more company credits at IMDbPro

    Box office

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    • Budget
      • £170,000 (estimated)
    See detailed box office info on IMDbPro

    Tech specs

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    • Runtime
      1 hour 32 minutes
    • Color
      • Color
    • Aspect ratio
      • 1.85 : 1

    Contribute to this page

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    Joan Collins, Peter Cushing, and Ralph Richardson in Histoires d'outre-tombe (1972)
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